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March 17th, 2021 × #Authentication#Security#Web Development

How To Build Your Own Auth

Scott and Wes discuss implementing authentication from scratch using sessions, JWT, cookies, CORS, CSRF and related concepts.

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In this episode of Syntax, Scott and Wes talk about building your own authentication — diving deep into JWT, sessions, tokens, cookies, local storage, CSRF, and how it all works!

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Show Notes

01:51 - Overview

05:13 - JWT

  • Base 64 encoded (not encrypted) token that contains data. We have both accessTokens and refreshTokens.
  • JWT has three parts:
    • Header
      • What kind of algo was used
    • Payload
      • Data about the user
      • Email
      • Username
      • UserID
      • refreshToken, authToken, sessionId
    • Signature
      • This ensures that no one monkeyed with the above parts. If you change your email in the payload, the signature is not invalid, because in order to generate the signature, it uses the header and payload as part of it.
  • accessToken
    • A short lived JWT that containsthe sessionTokenuserId and expires after 90min.
  • refreshToken
    • A long lived JWT that contains just the sessionToken and doesn't expire.
  • JWT can be decoded and read, but you have to encode them with your secret.
  • JWT can be stored anywhere, there are two main places:

20:26 - Cookies

  • We use httpOnly, secure cookies to store the accessToken and the refreshToken. The accessToken is a session cookie and is removed whenever the browser is closed. The refreshToken is valid for 100 days but is also re-created and revalidated for 100 more days each time the accessToken is generated.
  • Because these are httpOnly cookies, they cannot be accessed by JavaScript in the client and can only be set and removed on the server.
  • Note: Safari has stricter rules than others for same domain cookies (e.g. localhost won't work).

34:26 - Sessions

  • Sessions are when a user logs in on a device. If you open a phone and log in and a computer and log in, those will create two different sessions. A session contains information about the user's connection (like their IP) but it also contains the userId which allows us to create new accessTokens from a valid session.
  • Sessions can be valid or invalid. This allows us to log anyone out by setting their session to valid: false.
  • Sessions also have sessionToken which are generated on authentication or create account.

38:10 - CORS

  • Cross-origin-resource-sharing
  • Can be super tricky to get working cross-domain
  • You usually have to actually visit the website for the cookie to be set, even with lax cors

46:06 - CSRF

48:47 - Authentication process

52:13 - Helper Packages

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